Colorado is densely populated across the front range of Denver and Colorado Springs. After leaving the Denver Metropolitan Area and the I-25 corridor, one is quickly in areas that are sparsely populated, where people are accustomed to traveling many hours to access healthcare specialty expertise. THE PROBLEM Even in some larger population areas, certain medical specialists are not immediately available in person.

That can be complicated by the terrain of Colorado, with snowy mountain passes, road closures in the winter, and mudslides and traffic-congested roadways during the summer. Maternal fetal medicine providers are partners to local obstetricians and provide women with high-risk pregnancies the full range of obstetric and maternal medicine expertise necessary to treat any complication a high-risk mother might face in her pregnancy. With 24 MFM providers, the Children's Hospital Colorado/Colorado University School of Medicine Maternal Fetal Medicine Division is one of the largest in the country.

The division has 21 clinics across the Denver metro area, greater Colorado and Wyoming. They provide full prenatal care, maternal and fetal disease consultation, prenatal diagnosis, and genetic counseling. An MFM physician is a provider who has undergone additional training after their obstetrics and gynecology residency.

This extra training focuses on high-risk pregnancies. This includes additional training in maternal medical conditions (for example, diabetes, hypertension), fet.